Stock markets and oil markets bounce after brutal flooring

European stocks wasted little time in recouping 3 per cent of the 7 per cent they had slumped on Monday.

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Last Updated: Mar 10, 2020, 06.59 PM IST

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Most benchmark government bond yields also rose from record lows hit the previous day, as hopes for stimulus to support global growth in the face of epidemic boosted risk sentiment.

LONDON: Oil and equity markets staged solid rebounds on Tuesday after the previous day's pummelling, with signs of co-ordinated action by the world's biggest economies to cushion the economic impact of coronavirus helping pull investors out of panic mode.

Most benchmark government bond yields also rose from record lows hit the previous day, as hopes for stimulus to support global growth in the face of epidemic boosted risk sentiment.

European stocks wasted little time in recouping 3 per cent of the 7 per cent they had slumped on Monday, one of their worst days on record. The oil and gas and mining sectors led gains as oil regained its footing after plunging 25 per cent following the breakdown of a crucial global oil pact.

Yields on benchmark US 10-year Treasury debt more than doubled to 0.70 per cent and those on German Bunds jumped around 20 basis points as investors pared some safe-haven holdings.

Supporting the mood was a pledge from US President Donald Trump on Monday to take "major" steps to protect the economy and float the idea of a payroll tax cut with congressional Republicans.

Japan said it would spend another 430.8 billion yen ($4.1 billion) to ease the effects of the coronavirus outbreak and Italy's deputy economy minister announced that mortgage payments would be suspended as the country deals with the second highest number of cases outside China.

Some of the biggest global investment banks, including JP Morgan, Citi and Barclays, now expect the Federal Reserve to cut US interest rates to zero in the coming months as part of a mass global move to provide some ballast and liquidity to the financial system.

"As of today, we believe that markets have gone from being overly complacent to overly pessimistic," the chief investment officers of Europe's largest asset manager Amundi wrote in a note to clients.

"Our central case, instead, is one of a temporary setback, although more prolonged compared to what we were expecting a month ago, followed by a recovery," they added.

Oil suffered its sharpest drop since the 1991 Gulf war and global stocks plunged on Monday after Saudi Arabia launched a crude price war with Russia, further rattling investors already anxious about the spread of coronavirus.

US markets were expected to follow the European and Asian lead, with major stock futures trading up around 4 per cent.

Japan's Nikkei had ended the day up 0.85 per cent, after earlier touching its lowest level since April 2017.

Australia's index closed up 3.1 per cent as some went hunting for bargains in beaten down stocks.

China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index traded 2.1 per cent higher as new domestic coronavirus cases tumbled and President Xi Jinping's visit to the epicentre of the epidemic lifted sentiment.

The news continued to be negative elsewhere, however, with Italy ordering its citizens not to move around other than for work and emergencies and banning all public gatherings. "Although uncertainty is very high, we now expect similar restrictions will be put in place across Europe in the coming weeks," warned economists at JPMorgan.

"We are now expecting a rolling H1 2020 global growth contraction and a powerful global disinflationary wave to take hold," they added. "We expect the Fed to cut to zero at or before its March 18 meeting."

ONUS ON CENTRAL BANKSOil rallied around 5 per cent to claw back some of its massive losses from Monday, offering hope that markets had found a floor despite still-fragile sentiment.

Benchmark Brent crude futures bounced by $2 to $36.40 a barrel by 0930 GMT, paring back earlier gains that saw prices touch a session-high of $37.38 a barrel.

"In times of turmoil, nothing is more important in restoring confidence than the government appearing calm and in control of the situation, (however) tenuous that control may be," Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at broker OANDA, said in a note.

Such has been the conflagration of market wealth that analysts assumed policymakers would have to react aggressively to prevent an economic crisis.

The US Fed on Monday sharply stepped up the size of its fund injections into markets to head off stress.

Having delivered an emergency rate cut only last week, investors are fully pricing an easing of at least 75 basis points at the next Fed meeting on March 18, while a cut to near zero was now seen as likely by April.

Britain's finance minister is due to deliver his annual budget on Wednesday and there is much talk of coordinated stimulus with the Bank of England.

The European Central Bank meets on Thursday and will be under intense pressure to act, even though euro zone rates are already deeply negative.

"Italy's decision to quarantine the whole country will affect 15 per cent of Europe's GDP, putting the ECB at the forefront of efforts to cushion the escalating economic deterioration," said Brian Martin, a senior international economist at ANZ.

Bonds had charged ahead of the central banks to essentially price in a global recession of unknown length.

Yields on 10-year US Treasuries dipped to as little as 0.318 per cent on Monday -- a level unthinkable just a week ago -- but rose back to be last at 0.6818 per cent on Tuesday amid the stimulus chatter.

That in turn helped the dollar recoup some of its recent hefty losses to reach 104.70 yen, edging away from Monday's three-year trough around 101.17.

The euro eased back to $1.1350, after climbing 1.4 per cent on Monday to its highest in over 13 months at $1.1492.